Last Updated: Tue Mar 27, 2012 22:04 pm (KSA) 19:04 pm (GMT)

Scores killed in southern Libya clashes between tribal militias

An injured fighter receives treatment at Sabha Hospital after rival militias clashed at the city of Sabha, southern Libya. (Reuters)
An injured fighter receives treatment at Sabha Hospital after rival militias clashed at the city of Sabha, southern Libya. (Reuters)

At least 31 people have been killed and more than 60 were wounded on Tuesday in the third day of clashes between rival militias in the country’s southern city of Sabha, Al Arabiya correspondent reported on Tuesday.

He added that several officials have resigned from the National Transitional Council over the deadly Sabha clashes, but details were not immediately available.

The clashes highlight the problems the government faces in imposing its authority following the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi last year.

Fighting between gunmen from Sabha and those from the Tibu ethnic group had reached the centre of the city, said Ibrahim Misbah, a doctor at the main hospital.

An Interior Ministry official said the army had sent 300 soldiers stationed in southern Libya to help calm the situation on Monday. Another 300 soldiers left Tripoli on Tuesday to assist, he added.

Sabha fighter Oweidat al-Hifnawi said government forces had arrived in Sabha and were “in the middle of the clashes”.

“We know that they are here to try to solve the problem and not fight,” he said. “There are unconfirmed reports that they have retreated out of the city.”

The ruling National Transitional Council (NTC) is struggling to assert its authority across Libya, where rival militias and tribal groups are jostling for power and resources after the revolution that ousted Qaddafi.

Hampered by a lack of a coherent national army, the NTC has struggled to persuade the many militias who fought Qaddafi to lay down their arms and join the armed forces and police.

Abdulmajid Saif al-Nasser, an NTC representative for Sabha, said he was resigning in protest because he said the Council was not doing enough to stop the violence.

“I have not seen any reaction from the Council to what is happening now in Sabha. The air force has not been sent out, there was only a plane from the health ministry carrying medicine,” he told Libyan television. “The state is supposed to intervene in these cases ... but there is no state.”

Mousa al-Koni, a Tibu representative on the NTC, said by phone from Tunis that the clashes had escalated after Tibu former fighters tried to steal a car from a member of the Sabha militia. He said a reconciliation committee was being formed to help stop the violence.

Last month, dozens of people were killed in clashes between tribes in the far southeastern province of Al Kufra. Armed forces eventually intervened to stop the fighting, in a rare example of the Tripoli government imposing its authority.

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